The speed depended on Rawal lawyers getting the certified copy of the court of appeal ruling and immediately appealing at supreme court. I think there is nothing wrong with the speed. In fact such kinds of speed is what Mutunga should be encouraging and be proud of.
Yet the other parties have raised serious issues on the point of speed. All sorts of legal types have commented on that. And there are also quite a few others who are not directly involved but have also raised questions on the matter. You can find them all over the place. Here is one that is likely to be read by many Kenyans:
http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/It-is-dangerous-when-actions-of-judges-fail-moral-test/-/440808/3231540/-/p1x52wz/-/index.htmlWe can go back-and-forth on the speed with which Njoki Ndungu acted, but let us here speed up things things. Let's proceed on the simple basis that any and all speed is good. If so, then Mutunga is in fact practicing what he preaches, and Rawal
et. al. ought to be pleased that they will now not have to wait for 3 weeks.
I know Mutunga has a lot of administrative power and he has done no much with it.
According to you. And if I ask for details on what he should have and could have and might have ... done, I will be referred to Google, right? No need to go that route again.
And it depends on where you look .... One example in which he has helpfully used his administrative powers is to develop a standard "operations manual" for all high court judges. (Incidentally, the manual also tells them how they are to go about issuing hearing dates.)
Here is another example: Sentencing in Kenya (especially in petty crime) has largely been bizarre, illogical, non-uniform ... hungry guy steals chicken and gets 7 years, hardly any allowances for mental illness, etc. A huge part of the problem has been that the Kenyan judiciary has not had any real sentencing guidelines; contrast that with other places, e.g. the UK, and especially in how otherwise harmless first-offenders are dealt with. Thanks to Dr. Studs' leadership, Kenya now has some guidelines (even if they can be improved upon):
http://kenyalaw.org/kenyalawblog/sentencing-policy-guidelines/And so on, and so forth.
Anyone who genuinely wants to know of Mutunga's impact on the Kenyan judiciary should look beyond titillating headlines in the daily rags.
Except now when he faces a self-imposed deadline and he has to break the law (at least according to Rawal).
Rawal thinks so? No kidding !?!? My my, what a surprise.
I doubt he has the right to intrude into dates already set by a duty judge.
Actually judges---and lesser judges at that---all over the world routinely change hearing dates that have been set by other judges, even in places where judicial independence is taken extremely seriously. Here is a typical instance, which will probably be happening in Kenya right now, with the transfer of judges: A judge takes over a case part-way; he or she decides that there is a lot of material to go through; he or she then changes a hearing date. No problem with that; what they must not do is to change judicial decision. (Except for dates and timelines explicitly laid down in law, the absurdity in claiming that a change of dates is necessarily a change in a judicial decision should be apparent if one thinks it through to what it would mean for appeals.